Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âI didnât notice her hair.â
He gaped at me in a sort of petrified astonishment.
âYouâ âdidnâtâ ânoticeâ âherâ âhair!â he gasped.
I canât fix the dates exactly, but it must have been about three weeks after this that I got a telegram:
âCall Madison Avenue immediatelyâ âFlorence Craye.â
She neednât have signed her name. I should have known who it was from by the wording. Ever since I was a kid, Duggieâs sister Florence has oppressed me to the most fearful extent. Not that Iâm the only one. Her brothers live in terror of her, I know. Especially Edwin. Heâs never been able to get away from her and itâs absolutely broken his spirit. Heâs a mild, hopeless sort of chump who spends all his time at homeâ âthey live near Philadelphiaâ âand has never been known to come to New York. Heâs writing a history of the family, or something, I believe.
You see, events have conspired, so to speak, to let Florence do pretty much as she likes with them. Originally there was old man Craye, Duggieâs father, who made a fortune out of the Soup Trust; Duggieâs elder brother Edwin; Florence; and Duggie. Mrs. Craye has been dead some years. Then came the smash. It happened through the old man. Most people, if you ask them, will tell you that he ought to be in Bloomingdale; and Iâm not sure theyâre not right. At any rate, one morning he came down to breakfast, lifted the first cover on the sideboard, said in a sort of despairing way, âEggs! Eggs! Eggs! Curse all eggs!â and walked out of the room. Nobody thought much of it till about an hour afterward, when they found that he had packed a grip, left the house, and caught the train to New York. Next day they got a letter from him, saying that he was off to Europe, never to return, and that all communications were to be addressed to his lawyers. And from that day on none of them had seen him. He wrote occasionally, generally from Paris; and that was all.
Well, directly news of this got about, down swooped a series of aunts to grab the helm. They didnât stay long. Florence had them out, one after the other, in no time. If any lingering doubt remained in their minds, donât you know, as to who was going to be boss at home, it wasnât her fault. Since then she has run the show.
I went to Madison Avenue. It was one of the auntsâ houses. There was no sign of the aunt when I calledâ âshe had probably climbed a tree and pulled it up after herâ âbut Florence was there.
She is a tall woman with what, I believe, is called âa presence.â Her eyes are bright and black, and have a way of getting right inside you, donât you know, and running up and down your spine. She has a deep voice. She is about ten years older than Duggieâs brother Edwin, who is six years older than Duggie.
âGood afternoon,â she said. âSit down.â
I poured myself into a chair.
âReginald,â she said, âwhat is this I hear about Douglas?â
I said I didnât know.
âHe says that you introduced him.â
âEh?â
âTo this womanâ âthis Mrs. Darrell.â
âMrs. Darrell?â
My memoryâs pretty rocky, and the name conveyed nothing to me.
She pulled out a letter.
âYes,â she said, âMrs. Dorothy Darrell.â
âGreat Scott! Dorothea!â
Her eyes resumed their spine drill.
âWho is she?â
âOnly a palmist.â
âOnly a palmist!â Her voice absolutely boomed. âWell, my brother Douglas is engaged to be married to her.â
âMany happy returns of the day,â I said.
I donât know why I said it. It wasnât what I meant to say. Iâm not sure I meant to say anything.
She glared at me. By this time I was pure jelly. I simply flowed about the chair.
âYou are facetious, Reginald,â she said.
âNo, no, no,â I shouted. âIt slipped out. I wouldnât be facetious for worlds.â
âI am glad. It is no laughing matter. Have you any suggestions?â
âSuggestions?â
âYou donât imagine it can be allowed to go on? The engagement must be broken, of course. But how?â
âWhy donât you tell him he mustnât?â
âI shall naturally express my strong disapproval, but it may not be effective. When out of the reach of my personal influence, my wretched brother is self-willed to a degree.â
I saw what she meant. Good old Duggie wasnât going to have those eyes patrolling his spine if he knew it. He meant to keep away and conduct this business by letter. There was going to be no personal interview with sister, if he had to dodge about America like a snipe.
We sat for a long time without speaking. Then I became rather subtle. I had a brainwave and saw my way to making things right for Dug and at the same time squaring myself with Florence. After all, I thought, the old boy couldnât keep away from home for the rest of his life. He would have to go there sooner or later. And my scheme made it pleasant and easy for him.
âIâll tell you what I should do if I were you,â I said. âIâm not sure I didnât read some book or see some play somewhere or other where they tried it on, and it worked all right. Fellow got engaged to a girl, and the family didnât like it, but, instead of kicking, they pretended to be tickled to pieces, and had the fellow and the girl down to visit them. And then, after the fellow had seen the girl with the home circle as a background, donât you know, he came to the conclusion that it wouldnât do, and broke off the engagement.â
It seemed to strike her.
âI hardly expected so sensible a suggestion from you, Reginald,â she said. âIt is a very good plan. It shows that you really have a definite substratum of intelligence; and it is all the more deplorable that you should idle your way through the world as you do, when you might be performing some really useful work.â
That was Florence all over. Even
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